Socionics is a theory of information processing and personality type, distinguished by its information model of the psyche, called Model A, and a model of interpersonal relations. It incorporates Carl Jung's work on Psychological Types with Antoni Kępiński's theory of information metabolism. Socionics is a modification of Jung's personality type theory that uses eight psychic functions. These functions process information at varying levels of competency and interact with the corresponding function in other individuals, giving rise to predictable reactions and impressions—a theory of intertype relations.
Socionics was developed in the 1970s and '80s, primarily by the Lithuanian researcher Aušra Augustinavičiūtė, an economist, sociologist, and dean of the Vilnius Pedagogical University's department of family science. A. Augustinavičiūtė has later shortened her last name from "Augustinavichiute" to "Augusta" to make it easier to spell for foreigners. The name "socionics" is derived from the word "society", because A. Augusta believed that each personality type has a distinct purpose in society, which can be described and explained by socionics. Augusta created symbols to represent the functions described by Carl Jung and — together with a circle of fellow researchers/hobbyists — eventually created what is known as the "socionic model of the psyche" — a description of the psyche where each of the 8 information elements has its place in each person's psyche.
The central idea of socionics is that information is intuitively divisible into eight categories, called information aspects or information elements, which a person's psyche processes using eight psychological functions. Each sociotype has a different correspondence between functions and information elements, which results in different ways of perceiving, processing, and producing information. This in turn results in distinct thinking patterns, values, and responses to arguments, all of which are encompassed within socionic type. Socionics' theory of intertype relations is based on the interaction of these functions between types.
The problem with Ni is that it's often wildly off-base (this is a problem Ne also has), and the rest of the time, usually, what it sees isn't particularly
FreelancePoliceman Today, 05:06 AMI once wrote a piece on this in hellohellohello's thread with Fi there.
In a nutshell it was a Theory of Mind projection, or lack thereof
I guess that makes sense, and is a good summary, and it's related to Fe HA and Fi HA as well as the PoLR.
Yep. I think that
Calm dynamic introvert liking grumpy people? For sure, it's ILI.
Kurt Gabin Yesterday, 09:00 PMI'm going to vote IEE. SLI is securing this as a prime directive. More or less depending on type. In your salvo I see Delta, not Alpha, also.
Expansion Yesterday, 01:25 PMGrounded in the moment, I can appreciate it for sure, it's just hard to be grounded in the moments sometimes cause I'm so unfocused. I'm pretty good at
UsagiLemonDrop Yesterday, 11:45 AMThe lesson most of us refuse to learn is that people will, ultimately, believe the truth if they are simply told it "in a way they'll understand"
End Yesterday, 03:32 AMNeed some examples of LSE-H
https://daddygulenko4life.blogspot.c...criptions.html
I like the description/vibes
Same here, I get what you mean. Personally, I think when it comes to my typings of people, my supervisees and extinguishment types are easiest to type.
loopyclouds Yesterday, 02:34 AM
Gamma Examples
The Reality Denialist Today, 09:21 AM